Gadget Graveyard: 10 Technologies About to Go Extinct

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Gadget Graveyard: 10 Technologies About to Go Extinct

Post by Zarathustra »

www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,515647,00.html


Looking back at the 20th century, it's clear that even the biggest and baddest gadget sensations will one day fall victim to technological evolution.

As each year brings tinier, shinier toys, it's easy to forget that not too long ago typewriters were the professional alternative to freehand, Walkmen ruled the portable-music market and extra-long phone cords would let you speak to friends while standing 10 feet away from the wall-mounted base.

Each of those marvels was a wonder of its time. Now each is obsolete, a once-outstanding advancement made laughable when compared to the contact-lens camera or Japan's soon-to-be feasible moon-walking robot.

We don't even realize something's obsolete until we realize we haven't seen it in a while — a floppy disk stashed in the back of a desk drawer, or an unused videocassette propping up a table.

"These technologies are dying out because a more flexible way of doing things now exists to replace them," explains Mike Knuepfel, a recent Stanford graduate with a degree in product design. "Bulky CDs are replaced by MP3s and streaming files, newspapers can be read online, you need to carry film for cameras, and a house phone is another thing to worry about. People want to be mobile and flexible."


In no particular order, here are 10 technological dinosaurs that recently went extinct, or will be before you know it.

1. Landline phones: Walk into any college dorm room and ask to use a landline. You'll be met with blank stares. With cell-phone technology continually evolving, it seems that these days only a handful of people are still moving into a new house and having the landline turned on.
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2. Floppy disks: Storing something on an external device? C'est possible? Considering the state of computer technology at the end of the 1970s, it's no wonder people were astounded by the usefulness of the 5 1/4-inch wide, 360-KB floppy disk.

A decade later, the disks had shrunk to 3 1/2 inches and their capacity multiplied to a whopping 1.44 MB — enough for a minute and a half of an MP3-file song. If you still have a few lying around, they make great coasters.

3. Wristwatches: Throwing on a fancy watch may make you look professional, but let's be honest. Cell phones and iPods tell you the time when you're out and about, and virtually every appliance in your home — from your refrigerator to your coffeemaker to your television and your DVD player — has a clock. No one wears a wristwatch anymore, unless he or she grew up with one.

4. VHS tape and VCRs: The Vertical Helical Scan — or Video Home System, depending on whom you ask — met a sad death in 2006 when retailers decided there was no room left on their shelves for the big, bulky cassettes. Digital video recorders gave you perfect-looking "time-shifted" TV shows, and DVDs let you skip the previews on rented movies.

Many people still keep VCRs around for when grandparents ask to see that old tape of little Bobby — who's now 22 and fresh out of college — shoving cake into his mouth on his first birthday. And you could always turn your VCR into a toaster.

5. Beepers: Annoying devices designed to beep any and every time anyone felt like reaching you, it wasn't sad at all to see these disappear when cell-phone plans dropped below $50 a month around the year 2000.

6. Film cameras: When Polaroid announced in February 2008 that it would stop selling its famous instant-developing film, people ran out to buy up the remaining stock in order to preserve this unique form of photography. Kodak and Fuji still make film, but they, like Polaroid, are counting on their digital-camera lines to keep them afloat.

7. Typewriters: Once one of the most powerful means of mass communication, the typewriter claimed a spot near the top of the technological food chain for more than 100 years.

Initially entirely manual, electric typewriters caught on after World War II, and the distinctive clickety-clack-whirr of dozens of IBM Selectrics going at once defined corporate life in the 1960s and '70s.

Typewriters did have drawbacks — smudged fingers, only two or three copies at a time and gallons of whiteout to correct mistakes. But today, all that remains is the illogical QWERTY keyboard, which was created to force the typist to go more slowly so the keys wouldn't jam up.

8. The Walkman, Discman and MiniDisc player: The multitasker's dream, the Sony Walkman portable cassette player changed the way the world listened to music in 1979, quickly becoming the hottest accessory of the early 1980s.

In 1984, Sony trumped itself with the introduction of the Discman, the CD version, which allowed for individual tracks instead of one never-ending, albeit varied, song.

Eight years later, a new format, the MiniDisc, essentially a tiny CD in a cartridge, caught on in Europe and Asia. But it fizzled in the U.S., where oblivious Yanks kept on listening to their Discmen until they were killed off by iPods in the early years of this decade.

9. Dial-up Internet access: It's hard to see why anyone would use a phone line to connect to the Internet when there are so many feasible alternatives.

But 9 percent of Internet users in a 2008 Pew Internet and American Life survey still get online that way, and 35 percent of those cite subscription costs — about $10/month compared to an average broadband monthly fee of $35 — as their primary reason for not switching.

America Online tried to nudge its holdouts into the fast lane in 2006 by jacking up dial-up rates, but in early 2009 Earthlink actually lowered its phone-modem fees to $8/month.

Dial-up may seem to belong with smoke signals and carrier pigeons on the communications scrap heap, but if all you're doing is checking your e-mail, it may make sense.

10. DVDs: What's that, you say? How can DVDs be obsolete? Facts don't lie — DVD sales fell off the proverbial cliff in the first three months of 2009, with some retailers reporting a 40 percent drop from the same period a year earlier.

Some of that could be attributed to the recession, but sales of video games, which cost two or three times as much, actually went up about 10 percent.

The fact is that with broadband Internet, you don't need a disc to watch a movie any more. Netflix and Blockbuster have recognized that by rapidly ramping up their online-download services.
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Post by dlbpharmd »

I still wear a wristwatch. Guess that makes me old-fashioned.
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Post by danlo »

It's pretty fancy too! :biggrin: I think landlines will last longer than people expect. I love my walkman, even now that it's belt attachment has snapped off... :P
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Post by High Lord Tolkien »

dlbpharmd wrote:I still wear a wristwatch. Guess that makes me old-fashioned.
I always used to wear a wrist watch but stopped once I always had a cell phone on my hip.
I tried wearing one recently and although I thought it looked cool it felt awkward.
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Post by Menolly »

danlo wrote:
dlbpharmd wrote:I still wear a wristwatch. Guess that makes me old-fashioned.
It's pretty fancy too!
...yeah...

...about as technologically advanced as those Vols get... ;)
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Post by dlbpharmd »

Menolly wrote:
danlo wrote:
dlbpharmd wrote:I still wear a wristwatch. Guess that makes me old-fashioned.
It's pretty fancy too!
...yeah...

...about as technologically advanced as those Vols get... ;)
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Re: Gadget Graveyard: 10 Technologies About to Go Extinct

Post by matrixman »

Landline phones: I've only ever used my cell phone as my home phone.

Wristwatches: call me old-fashioned, too, because I always wear one whenever I go out. Sure, cell phones and iPods may tell you the time, but you have to whip them out and turn them on first. Oh, wait, sorry, I forgot: people today have their cells and iPods permanently on and glued to their hands. Me, I prefer the elegant, functional simplicity of the wristwatch.

VHS tape and VCRs: I have a few obscure VHS movies I still like to watch now and again, so I'm keeping my VCR.

Film cameras: I'm keeping my old 35mm compacts for nostalgia's sake.

The Walkman, Discman and MiniDisc player: I'm still using a Sony Discman, because it gives me great CD sound quality. That said, I'm definitely eyeing one of Sony's MP3 players as a future purchase.

Dial-up Internet access: No fond memories of dial-up from me. Switched to broadband in '99 and never looked back.

DVDs: I only have eyes for Blu-ray right now. DVD, you were awesome in your time. It was great to know you.
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Post by wayfriend »

I'm keeping my watch. No one's gonna come between me and Mickey. :D

And didn't typewriters disappear about twenty years ago? It's kinda like saying fins on cars are passe.
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Post by Cail »

They can take my watch when they can pry it off my cold, dead wrist.
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Post by Vraith »

I can't wait till the mp/computer/cell industries go all retro like the auto industry.
teeny-tiny boomboxes, laptops that transformer-fold to Commodore 64's, (desk included!), belt-mounted rotary dial accessories, ipod's with optional house-size speakers (self-propelled for convenience/portability).
The author didn't even mention musician gear...the very first synthesizer filled a big-rig and could create an amazing 4 different sounds.
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Post by I'm Murrin »

I'd rather glance at my wrist for the time than fish my phone out of my pocket.
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Post by sgt.null »

we got rid of our landline phone over a year ago. do not miss it a bit.

i can't have a cell phone at work - so i still wear a wrist watch.

i still have my 60's era typewriter. julie gave it to me one Christmas. i still use it on occassion.

still use dvds.
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Post by matrixman »

sgt.null wrote: i still have my 60's era typewriter. julie gave it to me one Christmas. i still use it on occassion.
Wow. I remember briefly using an old model back in elementary school in '82 - they still had a couple kicking around. Sorry, but I don't miss those clunky things :P

That reminds me, back in the article:
Typewriters did have drawbacks — smudged fingers, only two or three copies at a time and gallons of whiteout to correct mistakes. But today, all that remains is the illogical QWERTY keyboard, which was created to force the typist to go more slowly so the keys wouldn't jam up.
Darn that QWERTY! I can type at a decent speed, but it bugs me that I was trained on a system that held back the typist on purpose. The Dvorak layout is supposed to be more efficient, correct? Would it be worth it to re-train myself on it? Maybe just as important: are Dvorak keyboards even available?
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Post by Vraith »

matrixman wrote:
sgt.null wrote: i still have my 60's era typewriter. julie gave it to me one Christmas. i still use it on occassion.
Wow. I remember briefly using an old model back in elementary school in '82 - they still had a couple kicking around. Sorry, but I don't miss those clunky things :P

That reminds me, back in the article:
Typewriters did have drawbacks — smudged fingers, only two or three copies at a time and gallons of whiteout to correct mistakes. But today, all that remains is the illogical QWERTY keyboard, which was created to force the typist to go more slowly so the keys wouldn't jam up.
Darn that QWERTY! I can type at a decent speed, but it bugs me that I was trained on a system that held back the typist on purpose. The Dvorak layout is supposed to be more efficient, correct? Would it be worth it to re-train myself on it? Maybe just as important: are Dvorak keyboards even available?
I'm pretty sure I ran across software to make your comp board another format (Dvorak is only one possibility...in fact I think there are even 2 or 3 versions of Dvorak, too).
Finding diagrams of other systems is easy...so you could go in and reassign the keys yourself [tedious...I did it for Russian once]
It's POSSIBLE there's an alternate layout option already hidden away on your system somewhere [I'm pretty sure it was available in Win95 pro or business, or whatever it was called]
Actual keyboards do exist, but I've only seen them online, never on a shelf.
I'm not sure about retraining...in theory, you have better dexterity development from typing...but you've also ingrained a lot of patterns.
[which is why I've thought about it but never tried it...what a waste of time if it fails]
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the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass.
"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
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Post by matrixman »

Thanks, Vraith!

Yes, I may be just kidding myself about re-training. Not sure that I'd have the self-discipline (I took typing class in high school). And the thought of reassigning all the keys isn't appealing. Still, if I'm bored enough, who knows...
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Post by Avatar »

What amuses me is the fact that even with a keyboard specially designed to make the typist go slowly, there are people who can type up to 120 words per minute. Human adaptivity is amazing.

(I do about 50wpm myself. Too much effort to learn another layout now...)

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Post by Menolly »

Avatar wrote:What amuses me is the fact that even with a keyboard specially designed to make the typist go slowly, there are people who can type up to 120 words per minute. Human adaptivity is amazing.
*nodding*

My mom was a steno girl as she worked for her education degree. Her speed was about that, and stayed at that throughout her life...

...on a lightweight, portable manual, non-electric typewriter.

And somehow, the keys never jammed on her...
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Post by Vraith »

Menolly wrote:
Avatar wrote:What amuses me is the fact that even with a keyboard specially designed to make the typist go slowly, there are people who can type up to 120 words per minute. Human adaptivity is amazing.
*nodding*

My mom was a steno girl as she worked for her education degree. Her speed was about that, and stayed at that throughout her life...

...on a lightweight, portable manual, non-electric typewriter.

And somehow, the keys never jammed on her...
I learned on my great-grandmothers machine...y'know, the black cast-iron ones with an actual bell and manual return lever. All these decades later, and I still push the keys like I'm squashing a cockroach.
[spoiler]Sig-man, Libtard, Stupid piece of shit. change your text color to brown. Mr. Reliable, bullshit-slinging liarFucker-user.[/spoiler]
the difference between evidence and sources: whether they come from the horse's mouth or a horse's ass.
"Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
the hyperbole is a beauty...for we are then allowed to say a little more than the truth...and language is more efficient when it goes beyond reality than when it stops short of it.
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Post by Menolly »

Vraith wrote:
Menolly wrote:
Avatar wrote:What amuses me is the fact that even with a keyboard specially designed to make the typist go slowly, there are people who can type up to 120 words per minute. Human adaptivity is amazing.
*nodding*

My mom was a steno girl as she worked for her education degree. Her speed was about that, and stayed at that throughout her life...

...on a lightweight, portable manual, non-electric typewriter.

And somehow, the keys never jammed on her...
I learned on my great-grandmothers machine...y'know, the black cast-iron ones with an actual bell and manual return lever. All these decades later, and I still push the keys like I'm squashing a cockroach.
*nodding*

I think those heavier ones might have slowed Mom down. Even though her portable was manual, those cast iron ones did take more force to push down the keys...
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Post by Farsailer »

wristwatch - yes
landline - yes, but only for the DSL; it's more reliable than cable around here. I don't know the number associated with it.
VCR - player gone, but I still have a few cassettes laying around the house
music cassettes - time to dump those
film cameras - i still have mine but the battery latch broke so it's not much use anymore.
dialup internet - glad it's out of my life
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